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Mississippi John Hurt

Born ca.1892, died 1966. Recorded by the Library of Congress in 1964 and "Hurt performed on the university and coffeehouse concert circuit with other Delta blues musicians who were brought out of retirement." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_John_Hurt

Coffee Blues album: www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fg20kQUMHY

In my opinion, it's best to listen to these old blues singers on vinyl, but the above digitally "cleaned up" version sounds good, too. ;-)
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18 comments

Pano ☼ Rapi ♫✯♫ said:

So I got to listen tho him ! :-)
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Pano ☼ Rapi ♫✯♫:

Excellent! Thank you, Rapi. Another one of my favorites, John Lee Hooker: www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUUyFrHERpU (From Blues Brothers). Hooker died in 2001. He was a very beloved person, lived modestly in small house in an ordinary neighborhood.
7 years ago

Damir said:

vinyl is the best
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Damir:

I love vinyl. If my grandchildren ever listened to it they would probably hate it, or at least look at me like I'm crazy. Those tiny "snaps" are wonderful!
7 years ago

Léopold said:

Amongst my very favourite kind of acoustic blues.
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Léopold:

Oooh, a French Canadian blues fan! ;-)
7 years ago ( translate )

Keith Burton said:

I'm far too young to remember vinyl records :-)) But I've saved that link for listening to later!
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Keith Burton:

What? You're kidding, right? If not, you have missed out on an important kind of antique. Thanks, Keith!
7 years ago

Old Owl said:

Gosh, how you take me back in time, Diane, to my buying my first Mississippi John Hurt album in 1968 form a record shop in Leeds called Track One. I still have that vinyl somewhere in the house ... Nowadays I listen through the computer and it's not the same. Thank you for provoking the memories with this photograph. I think I'll go and listen to "Make me a pallet on your floor" ...
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Old Owl:

Oh, one of the most well-known blues numbers! I've had a few of my vinyls in storage for a long time. I suppose they are warped by now, even though I arranged them vertically. I just watched a documentary on Youtube about the blues influence on UK music in the early days. There are quite a few docs about that, as well as books, of course. In the 1960s and 70s, I was one of the few white people I knew who loved blues and soul music. Everyone else was crazy about Beatles, Doors, Rolling Stones (who were way more blues-influenced than the Beatles were), Led Zeppelin, and all the "hippie bands."
7 years ago

Léopold replied to Diane Putnam:

I can play some too on my acoustic guitar Diane.
I have seen so many Blues shows but much less since a couple a decades.
7 years ago ( translate )

Keith Burton replied to Diane Putnam:

i actually had quite a lot of vinyl records - mainly Classic Rock. I stupidly sold them on when CDs came out :-))

How was I to know they'd make a comeback and some would become quite collectable?
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Léopold:

It seems to me that blues has dropped out of sight. Not surprising, but certainly disappointing. Or, it could be that I just don't hear it played on the local Public Broadcasting station. The San Francisco station had a regular blues program.
7 years ago

Diane Putnam replied to Keith Burton:

I think we're all kicking ourselves over that, Keith! I remember taking a long time to get used to the sound of discs, sort of a metallic, harsh sound quality.
7 years ago